The Newport Beach City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to approve an agreement between the city and Newport’s largest operator of drug rehabilitation homes that will cap the number of recovering addicts the company Sober Living by the Sea can house in the city.
A handful of Newport Beach residents Tuesday decried what they claimed were loopholes in the agreement.
Bob Rush, a West Newport resident who has been a vocal opponent of the over concentration of rehabilitation homes in his neighborhood, waived print outs of photographs of stacks of mattresses in a garage he claimed came from a Sober Living by the Sea-run house, claiming the company could sneak in extra patients under the noses of the city’s code enforcement officials.
“We’re stuck with this fatal flaw to this agreement,” Rush said.
The city can inspect any of Sober Living by the Sea’s homes with reasonable notice, to make sure they are following the rules, Newport Beach Assistant Manager Dave Kiff said.